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      Resource Patchiness as a Resolution to the Food Paradox in the Sea.

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          Abstract

          AbstractAverage concentrations of biota in the ocean are low, presenting a critical problem for ocean consumers. High-resolution sampling, however, demonstrates that the ocean is peppered with narrow hot spots of organism activity. To determine whether these resource aggregations could provide a significant solution to the ocean's food paradox, a conceptual graphical model was developed that facilitates comparisons of the role of patchiness in predator-prey interactions across taxa, size scales, and ecosystems. The model predicts that predators are more reliant on aggregated resources for foraging success when the average concentrations of resources is low, the size discrepancy between predator and prey is great, the predator has a high metabolic rate, and/or the predator's foraging time is limited. Size structure differences between marine and terrestrial food webs and a vast disparity in the overall mean density of their resources lead to the conclusion that high-density aggregations of prey are much more important to the survival of oceanic predators than their terrestrial counterparts, shaping the foraging decisions that are available to an individual and setting the stage on which evolutionary pressures can act. Patches of plenty may be rare, but they play an outsized role in behavioral, ecological, and evolutionary processes, particularly in the sea.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am Nat
          The American naturalist
          University of Chicago Press
          1537-5323
          0003-0147
          Jan 2024
          : 203
          : 1
          Article
          10.1086/727473
          38207143
          0055dddd-d29e-4fc2-a5ef-bcd1cce87037
          History

          predator-prey interactions,spatial pattern,patchiness,foraging ecology,conceptual model,animal behavior

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